Leveraging deep survival models to predict quality of care risk in diverse hospital readmissions

Hospital readmissions rate is reportedly high and has caused huge financial burden on health care systems in many countries. It is viewed as an important indicator of health care providers’ quality of care. We examine the use of machine learning-based survival analysis to assess quality of care risk...

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Published inScientific reports Vol. 13; no. 1; p. 10479
Main Authors Tran, Nhat Quang, Goel, Gautam, Pudota, Nirmala, Suesserman, Michael, Helms, John, Lasaga, Daniel, Olson, Dan, Bowen, Edward, Bhattacharya, Sanmitra
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Nature Publishing Group UK 28.06.2023
Nature Publishing Group
Nature Portfolio
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Summary:Hospital readmissions rate is reportedly high and has caused huge financial burden on health care systems in many countries. It is viewed as an important indicator of health care providers’ quality of care. We examine the use of machine learning-based survival analysis to assess quality of care risk in hospital readmissions. This study applies various survival models to explore the risk of hospital readmissions given patient demographics and their respective hospital discharges extracted from a health care claims dataset. We explore advanced feature representation techniques such as BioBERT and Node2Vec to encode high-dimensional diagnosis code features. To our knowledge, this study is the first to apply deep-learning based survival-analysis models for predicting hospital readmission risk agnostic of specific medical conditions and a fixed window for readmission. We found that modeling the time from discharge date to readmission date as a Weibull distribution as in the SparseDeepWeiSurv model yields the best discriminative power and calibration. In addition, embedding representations of the diagnosis codes do not contribute to improvement in model performance. We find dependency of each model’s performance on the time point at which it is evaluated. This time dependency of the models’ performance on the health care claims data may necessitate a different choice of model in quality of care issue detection at different points in time. We show the effectiveness of deep-learning based survival-analysis models in estimating the quality of care risk in hospital readmissions.
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ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-023-37477-3